我读,故我在:麻醉训练中非医学阅读及其与共情关系的研究。

Jenny E Pennycuff, Daniel Ruiz, Allison Mullins, Jesse D Supernaw, Jayalakshmi Pulipaka, Clark R Andersen, M James Lozada, Prameela Konda, Michelle Simon
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:住院医师的高同理心水平与患者预后的改善有关。同理心可以在阅读非医学写作时通过叙事转移来学习和练习,这是一个读者认同角色并在情感上参与情节的过程。我们假设,报告更多非医学阅读的住院医生和研究员会有更高的同理心水平,而在训练期间,同理心会下降。方法:通过电子邮件向研究生医学教育认证委员会认可的麻醉学住院医师和奖学金项目的项目主任发送调查问卷,并要求将调查问卷分发给学员。多伦多共情问卷、阅读量和人口统计数据都包括在调查中。采用多变量回归模型对响应数据进行分析。结果:136份回复中,119份纳入数据分析。17份部分完成的调查被排除在外。据报道,女性(P < 0.0001)和每周工作60至80小时的住院医生(P = 0.039)的共情得分较高。年龄、研究生培训年份、关系状况、与家人共度的时间以及对阅读的热爱与共情的增加没有显著相关。结论:在本研究中,我们考察了非医学小说阅读是否会增加医学实习生的同理心。我们的研究没有发现花在阅读上的时间和增加同理心之间有任何显著的联系;然而,我们发现工作时间更长,特别是60到80小时的受训者有更高的同理心得分。本研究的局限性包括样本量较小。在这一领域还需要进一步的研究,以确定是否还有其他无形因素影响受训者的同理心。
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I Read, Therefore I Am: Examining Nonmedical Reading and Its Relationship to Empathy in Anesthesia Training.

Background: High levels of empathy among resident physicians are associated with improved patient outcomes. Empathy may be learned and practiced when reading nonmedical writing through narrative transportation, a process by which readers identify with characters and become emotionally involved in the plot. We hypothesized that residents and fellows who reported more nonmedical reading would have higher empathy levels and that empathy would decrease during training.

Methods: An emailed survey was sent to program directors of Accreditation Council on Graduate Medical Education-accredited anesthesiology residency and fellowship programs, with a request to distribute the survey to trainees. The Toronto Empathy Questionnaire, reading volume, and demographics were included in the survey. Response data were analyzed using a multiple variable regression model.

Results: Of 136 responses, 119 were included for data analysis. Seventeen partially completed surveys were excluded. Higher empathy scores were reported among women (P < .0001) and residents who worked 60 to 80 hours per week (P = .039). Age, postgraduate year of training, relationship status, time spent with family, and avid reading were not significantly associated with increased empathy.

Conclusion: In this study, we examined whether nonmedical fiction reading would increase empathy in medical trainees. Our study was not able to find any significant association with time spent reading and increased empathy; however, we found that trainees who worked more hours, specifically 60 to 80 hours, had higher empathy scores. Limitations for this study included a smaller sample size. Further research should be done in this field to determine if there are other intangible factors that affect empathy in trainees.

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